elected4ever
New member
That is called being programmed into the heard Ferdinand. Maybe it is not smoking but eating the loco weed.:cow:Robots have wants and desires? Just what are you smokin'?
That is called being programmed into the heard Ferdinand. Maybe it is not smoking but eating the loco weed.:cow:Robots have wants and desires? Just what are you smokin'?
:thumb:Perhaps independent will is a better description of man's will than free will.
Robots have wants and desires? Just what are you smokin'?
Perhaps independent will is a better description of man's will than free will.
Robots have wants and desires? Just what are you smokin'?
...I've programmed this robot to WANT...
Muz
Isn't it strange that we have the same human desires that other cultures have and are continuously programmed by the cultures around us.:wazzup:Absolutely.
If (AppleColor==Green) {
DontEatApple()
ThrowItAway()
}
Else if (AppleColor == Red)
{
EatIt()
}
I've programmed this robot to WANT the RED apple and NOT the GREEN one.
If all we're doing is responding to that which pushes the right buttons, then wants and desires are nothing more that a complex set of conditionals evident in almost every programming language.
Muz
No you didn't
What do you think it means when the bible says that Jesus was tempted?A practical application is that temptation is not a sin, but yielding to it is. Jesus was tempted, yet without sin.
Sure I have. When it discovers an apple, its processing tells it to eat the red one and toss the green one. It's simplistic, but without free well, this is all that "want" means.
Muz
That is only partially true. I think we all act on our desires and wants in all cases to some degree. Just because we have not acted upon a desire or want is no sure sign that we will not. The opportunity to act on a want or desire may not have presented itself or a more desirable want or need may have replaced the old to produce a more perceived favorable outcome. A person acts on what is perceived to be his own self best interest at all times. That is independence and not freedom.There is not a causal relationship between want/desire/will (? compatibilistic). I can desire and want many things and not act on these desires in a deterministic way. I want to be rich, but I am not rich. I desire to be better looking or more fit, but I may or may not do something about it. I desire to not work today, but I am. I can respond to or reject my desires. Mind and will are related, but can also be somewhat independent. Just because I think something does not mean I actualize it with my will into reality. A practical application is that temptation is not a sin, but yielding to it is. Jesus was tempted, yet without sin.
No Muz, you're describing something without a will, not something without a "free" will.
Oh, please, lets not go there. He does not believe Jesus was the Son of God because he thinks Jesus could have sinned. If Jesus could have sinned then He was not the Son of God.What do you think it means when the bible says that Jesus was tempted?
That's what I suspected.Oh, please, lets not go there. He does not believe Jesus was the Son of God because he things Jesus could have sinned. If Jesus could have sinned then he was not the Son of God.
Perhaps independent will is a better description of man's will than free will.
It has a will. It acts completely on its own. I don't stand there and make decisions for it. It makes them.
Muz
Having a will requires emotion, feelings. Robots do not have feelings.